This article is about the Malaysian politician and lawyer. For the seaside promenade in Penang, see Karpal Singh Drive.
In this Indian name, the name Ram Singh is a patronymic, and the person should be referred to by the given name, Karpal Singh. The abbreviation "s/o" or "d/o", if used, means "son of" or "daughter of" respectively.
Born in Penang to SikhPunjabiIndian immigrant parents, Karpal studied law at the National University of Singapore. He was one of Malaysia's most prominent lawyers and took a number of high-profile cases, including drug-trafficking charges against foreign nationals. Karpal was an opponent of the death penalty, especially for drug trafficking.
In the courtroom and Parliament, he was a controversial figure. Karpal was suspended from Parliament several times, charged with sedition and detained under Malaysia's internal-security law. His reputation as a lawyer and opposition politician gave him the nickname "the Tiger of Jelutong".
Karpal's political career began in 1970 (when he joined the DAP), and he won a seat in the Kedah State Legislative Assembly in 1974. He was elected to parliament in 1978 as representative for Jelutong, Penang, and held the seat for more than 20 years until he lost it in 1999. Karpal returned to Parliament in the next general election, and led the DAP to its strongest-ever performance in the 2008 general election. A 2005 motor-vehicle accident put Karpal in a wheelchair, with neuro-motor problems in his right arm, but he continued his legal and political careers. He died on 17 April 2014 after another motor-vehicle accident.
Karpal studied at St. Xavier's Institution[3][4] and received his Bachelor of Laws degree from the National University of Singapore,[2] where he was the president of the student union.[3] He was barred from his hostel for protesting against the university's decision to mandate certificates of political suitability for incoming students.[3] Karpal said he took seven years to graduate, admitting that he was "playful" and "didn't attend lectures".[2] After failing his final-year courses, the dean made him sit at the front of his classes; according to Karpal, "I couldn't play the fool anymore and I passed my exams accordingly!"[2]
Legal career
He was called to the Penang bar in 1969 and joined a firm in Alor Star, Kedah.[3][4] Karpal founded his legal firm the following year,[5] and was known for his expertise in the field of litigation.[6] He was a pioneer in drug trafficking and habeas corpus cases, and opposed the death penalty.[7] Karpal was praised for "defending the little man",[4] and was called "a friend to the oppressed and marginalised."[8]Universiti Teknologi MARA law professor Shad Saleem Faruqi praised Karpal's legal team for their innovative interpretations, which helped defendants with difficult cases.[8]
Death penalty
Karpal was described as a leading opponent of the death penalty in Malaysia,[9] and successfully defended at least ten foreigners on serious drug charges (which have a mandatory death sentence).[4] However, in July 2010 he called for convicted child rapists to receive the death sentence.[10]
Among Karpal's highest-profile cases were his defence of Australian drug trafficker Kevin Barlow, who was executed in Malaysia in 1986.[11] Barlow and fellow Australian Brian Chambers were convicted of trafficking heroin by the High Court in Penang in July 1985,[12] and Karpal continued fighting to clear Barlow's name after his execution.[13] Karpal also defended New Zealanders Lorraine Cohen and her son, Aaron, against heroin-trafficking charges in 1987.[14] They were convicted, with Lorraine sentenced to death and Aaron to life in prison. Lorraine's death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in 1989, and both were pardoned and freed in 1996.[15] In 1977, Karpal managed to persuade the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to pardon a 14-year-old Chinese boy who was sentenced to death for possession of a firearm under the Internal Security Act, reportedly suggesting that to let the boy hang would be "politically explosive."[4]
In 2006, Karpal represented two sisters who were charged with allegedly masterminding the murder of their Australian stepfather Hans Herzog, who was killed by two male teenagers in a parang attack at his Kuala Lumpur home in 2003. The sisters were alleged to have hired the two boys to attack Herzog due to their resentment over the supposed abusive treatment they received from Herzog.[16] The sisters were later acquitted without their defence being called, and Karpal would later represent one of the two hired hitmen in his appeal in 2009, which ended with the boy, who was 17 at the time of the crime, to be convicted for murder and detained indefinitely at the Selangor Sultan's pleasure.[17] The boy's older friend Low Kian Boon (aged 18 at the time of the murder) was sentenced to death, before the sentence was reduced to 35 years' imprisonment and 12 strokes of the cane in 2024.[18]
Karpal also took on cases outside of Malaysia's jurisdiction during his legal career. In January 1995, Karpal travelled to Singapore and represented Malaysian gunman Ng Theng Shuang in his appeal against the death sentence issued to Ng under the Arms Offences Act for discharging his firearm during a goldsmith robbery heist at Singapore's South Bridge Road.[19] Ng's appeal was dismissed despite Karpal's arguments in the appeal, and he was hanged on 14 July 1995 in Changi Prison.[20]
Anwar Ibrahim
Karpal represented former Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim during Anwar's 1998 sodomy trial.[21] In September 1999, he produced a pathological report confirming high levels of arsenic in Anwar's body and accused authorities of poisoning him: "It could well be that someone out there wants to get rid of him ... even to the extent of murder ... I suspect people in high places are responsible for this situation."[9] The accusation led to Karpal's detention under the Sedition Act in January 2000.[22]
He was the lead defence counsel in Anwar's second sodomy trial, after new allegations in 2008.[23] After a two-year trial, Anwar was acquitted on 10 January 2012;[24] however, the acquittal was overturned two years later.[25]
In 1989, Karpal accused Deputy Speaker D. P. Vijandran of appearing in pornographic videos.[28] Although the allegations were dismissed due to lack of evidence, Vijandran resigned the following year.[29] In 1992, Karpal produced the alleged videotape in parliament and gave it to Deputy Speaker Ong Tee Keat.[29] Vijandran was convicted in May 1994 of fabricating evidence in an affidavit seeking a court order to stop his nephew from allegedly distributing pornographic videotapes in which he appeared,[30] but the conviction was overturned in 1998.[31] In 2000, Karpal was ordered to pay Vijandran RM500,000 (reduced to RM100,000 on appeal) in damages for defamation after he accused Vijandran of cheque fraud.[32][33]
Setback
In the 1999 election, Karpal lost the Jelutong parliamentary seat he had held for 21 years, and DAP leader Lim Kit Siang was also defeated.[21] The DAP had joined Barisan Alternatif, an opposition alliance with Parti Keadilan and the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) (a move strongly supported by Karpal and Lim).[34] Despite the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition's significant losses in the election, Keadilan and PAS absorbed the gains as DAP support eroded due to suspicion of PAS and its hard-line Islamic stance.[35] Although the DAP gained seats, the party performed well below expectations and Lim called the results a "catastrophic defeat".[36] Despite the setback, Karpal remained as party deputy chairman and Lim became chairman after the resignation of long-serving chairman Chen Man Hin.[37] Karpal strongly opposed a PAS plan to introduce hudud (Islamic codes of behavior) into the Terengganu state legal system in 1999, threatening to take the state government to court.[38]
Return to Parliament
In the 2004 general election, Karpal returned to parliament with a 1,261-vote majority in the new Bukit Gelugor seat.[39] The DAP regained its position as the largest opposition party in Parliament,[40] and Karpal became the party's national chairman on 4 September 2004.[41]
On 7 September, he was sanctioned for "misleading Parliament" after claiming that MPs had to raise their right hand while they took the oath of office on 17 May. A report by the Parliamentary Rights and Privileges Committee gave Karpal three days to apologise or face a six-month suspension.[6][42] He refused to apologise and served the suspension.[43][44]
Victories and controversy
Karpal retained his seat in the 2008 election with a nearly-20-fold-vote increased majority (21,015 votes).[45] The election saw historic gains for the opposition, who denied the ruling coalition Barisan Nasional (BN) a two-thirds majority in Parliament for the first time.[46]
The three major opposition parties formed a coalition
(the Pakatan Rakyat),[47] and Karpal was listed as the DAP representative on the coalition's Shadow Ministry of Home Affairs Committee in July 2009.[48]
In April 2010, he was suspended from parliament for ten days after he called the speaker a "dictator".[49] In December of that year, he and opposition members of parliament Anwar Ibrahim, Azmin Ali and Sivarasa Rasiah were suspended for six months. Anwar was suspended for stirring up controversy over government links to APCO Worldwide, while the rest were punished for publicising a report by the Rights and Privileges Committee finding Anwar guilty before the report was presented to Parliament.[50]
In December 2011, Karpal and Penang second deputy chief minister P. Ramasamy feuded over Ramasamy's reported accusation that dissidents in the DAP were plotting against him for not giving them projects and favours. Karpal called Ramasamy a "warlord" and asked for him to resign as deputy chief minister.[51] Ramasamy asked the party to remove its "godfathers", an apparent reference to Karpal.[51] The feud was resolved internally, and Ramasamy later denied ever making the accusation.[52] At the DAP national conference in January 2012, Karpal joined Ramasamy and asked the party's "warlords and godfathers [to] stand together against Barisan Nasional."[53]
Political views
Karpal Singh cited David Saul Marshall, Mahatma Gandhi and John F. Kennedy as influences. The 13 May Incident convinced him that Malaysia needed to take a multiracial course, and he joined the DAP in 1970. Karpal praised the country's first prime minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman for promoting racial unity.[2] He criticised the legal immunity granted to the hereditary Malay rulers in the original constitution, which was removed by the government in 1993.[4][54]
Karpal Singh opposed the idea of Malaysia as an Islamic state, arguing that the constitution provided for a secular nation with Islam as the official religion, and clashed with Mahathir and fellow opposition party PAS over the issue.[55] Karpal said "an Islamic state over my dead body" about the debate during a political speech,[2] but later said that he had apologised for the remark.[56]
Public image
Karpal was a controversial figure, and he and fellow DAP politician Lim Kit Siang have been referred to as racial provocateurs.[57] He was nicknamed "the Tiger of Jelutong" by admirers after serving five terms as Jelutong MP.[58] Karpal attributed the nickname to a confrontation with former Malaysian Indian Congress President Samy Vellu when he said to Samy, "he could be the lion, and I could be the tiger, because there are no lions in Malaysia!"[2]
Controversies
He clashed with government parliamentarians and assemblymen during debates. On two occasions in the Penang State Assembly, the speaker called police to have Karpal removed from the chamber.[13] Karpal ordered the police officers out both times, saying that they had no right to be there before walking out on his own.[13]
He criticised the Yang di-Pertuan Agong in the Dewan Rakyat for allegedly assaulting two men who were brought to the palace by police, which sparked demands for an apology from members of Parliament; Karpal refused.[13] Karpal filed a lawsuit against the king, Iskandar of Johor, in 1986 on behalf of one of the men. He lost, and the sultan reportedly named one of his dogs after him.[4]
Karpal served two six-month suspensions from Parliament: in September 2004 for "misleading" Parliament,[43] and in December 2010 for contempt.[50] During a May 2008 session, he called fellow parliamentarian Bung Moktar Radin the "Bigfoot from Kinabatangan".[59] Moments later, Karpal was mocked by Ibrahim Ali and Bung Moktar Radin for his inability to stand while speaking as a result of his disability (provoking a furore among opposition members).[59] The following month, he received a death threat in the form of a bullet delivered to his law firm.[60] In October, Karpal was suspended from Parliament for two days for calling speaker Pandikar Amin Mulia "not serious" and "playful".[61]
Karpal, four other opposition politicians and the editor of the Harakah Daily (the newspaper published by the opposition Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party) were arrested in January 2000 under the Sedition Act,[21] and he was charged with making seditious remarks in court during Anwar's first corruption trial.[63] This, the only known charge of sedition in any Commonwealth country brought against a lawyer for remarks made in court in defence of a client,[9] was dropped in 2002.[9][64]
He was again charged under the Sedition Act in March 2009 with threatening to sue the Sultan of Perak, Sultan Azlan Shah, in the wake of the 2009 Perak constitutional crisis. Karpal had contended that the sultan had exceeded his constitutional powers in appointing Zambry Abdul KadirMenteri Besar.[64][65] The charges were dismissed in June 2010 after the High Court determined that the prosecution had failed to prove a prima facie case.[66] However, the Court of Appeal reversed the acquittal in January 2012 and ordered Karpal to enter a defence.[67] In March 2019, 10 years after the incident the Federal Court acquitted Karpal posthumously.[68]
Gurmit described Karpal's detention from 1987 to 1989 as a "very big experience", which took a toll on her life because she had to "be strong" for their young children.[8] The initial stage of his disability also deeply upset her.[5] Karpal and Gurmit lived in Damansara Heights, Kuala Lumpur, from 1994 until his death.[5]
Accident and disability
On 28 January 2005, Karpal was involved in an accident which left him in a wheelchair.[69][70][71] A car struck a taxi in which he was seated from behind, severely bruising his thoracic vertebrae. The accident left Karpal with sensory impairment and reduced motor strength, and he was unable to walk or raise his right arm more than a few centimeters.[5][58][60] His seat in the parliamentary chamber was moved to the back row to accommodate his wheelchair.[58]
Death
In the early hours of 17 April 2014, Karpal died in a car crash on the North–South Expressway E1 near Gua Tempurung, Perak. His personal assistant, Michael Cornelius, was also killed in the accident. Ramkarpal (Karpal's son and one of the minivan's five occupants) and an Indonesian maid believed to have been employed by Karpal were injured.[72] The driver of the minivan was injured as well. Karpal's Toyota Alphard collided with the right side of a slow-moving, five-tonne Mitsubishi Canter lorry carrying cement, steel, and tiles. Although the lorry driver (identified as Abu Mansor Mohd) tested positive for cannabis, it was uncertain if he was under influence at the time of the accident.[73] According to Bukit Aman traffic-police chief SAC Mohd Fuad Abdul Latiff, road conditions and the weather were good at the time of the accident.[73]
Karpal's funeral was held on 20 April 2014 with full state honors in Penang, attended by his Family, Prime Minister Najib Razak and other mourners.[74]
His body reached the Batu Gantong Crematorium, George Town, Penang at 1:35 pm and was cremated after thousands of mourners chanted his name.[75] His son, Gobind, memorialised him on 5 May during the last of a series of tributes.[76]
Memorials, awards and accolades
On 19 April 2014, two days after his death, the IJM Promenade in Lebuh Sungai Pinang was renamed Karpal Singh Drive (Persiaran Karpal Singh).[77]The Full Biography: Karpal Singh, Tiger of Jelutong by Tim Donoghue, published in 2014 by Marshal Cavendish International, is an updated edition of Donoghue's Karpal Singh: Tiger of Jelutong which published prior to his death.[78][79][80] Karpal received the Glory of India Award of Excellence in 2011, and was one of the top 10 NRI Newsmakers of 2008.[81][82]
^Musa, M. Bakri (2007). Towards A Competitive Malaysia. Petaling Jaya: Strategic Information and Research Development Centre. p. 79. ISBN978-983-3782-20-8.